Date to be determined
Rainsy, whose party called a press conference in response, denied
that he had agreed to a February election date and rejected speculation
that any rift had emerged between him and Sokha, who is currently in the
United States.
He added that without Sokha’s presence in Cambodia – he said the
deputy leader could be out of the country for 10 more days – no
agreement could be signed, dampening hopes that Rainsy and Hun Sen could
ink a deal at the Royal Palace today.
“I would like to share some facts of the conversation [with Sam Rainsy]… We have agreed in principle to hold the next general election in February 2018, but Rainsy said he needed to consult with his deputy Kem Sokha,” the premier said yesterday at a ceremony for graduating students of the National Institute for Education, referring to a 45-minute phone conversation the pair had on Wednesday.
“I told him to write this down: The commune election will be held in
February 2017 and then the national election will be held in February
2018. This is in the draft [agreement], so [we] agreed together on this
word already.”
He was later informed by Interior Minister and Deputy Prime Minister
Sar Kheng that Sokha disagreed with the proposal, Hun Sen said.
“When the president agrees and the deputy president disagrees, I
don’t understand.… Letting excellency Kem Sokha veto does not seem very
good, [so] excellency Sam Rainsy should persuade excellency Kem Sokha
[to agree].
“I told [Rainsy] that [he] is the president. So [he] should tell Kem
Sokha not to be so obstinate.… If there is no agreement signed, it is
not the fault of Hun Sen or the CPP or Sam Rainsy or his working group.
It is the fault of Kem Sokha.”
Hun Sen also threatened to release a recording of his conversation with Rainsy if the opposition denied his claims.
“I have also reminded him please don’t make any statement which is
different to what we have talked about.… If a wrong statement is issued,
it will force me to leak a recording [of our conversation].”
The premier then proceeded to play a brief segment of an audio
recording, ostensibly of his phone conversation with Rainsy, in which
the CNRP leader could be heard greeting Hun Sen for Khmer New Year.
Rainsy told reporters yesterday that his party had rejected a
February 2018 election date in talks with Hun Sen because it was not
early enough, adding that any deal made with the CPP would have to be
agreed to and signed by both CNRP leaders.
“Kem Sokha and Sam Rainsy are one person. So [the CNRP] cannot let
Sam Rainsy do anything without Kem Sokha and cannot let Kem Sokha do
anything without Sam Rainsy,” he said, brushing aside speculation that a
rift had emerged between the two leaders over the election date.
“There is no way to split us in any way.”
He added that his party would continue to push for an election at least a year earlier than currently scheduled.
“They moved closer, earlier, by five months to February 2018, and we
replied to them that this is not enough; we want the election to be
earlier, at least one year earlier, because originally we asked for
mid-term. Mid-term would be early 2016,” he said.
“February 2018 is still in 2018. So citizens do not agree, and I also cannot accept this.
“We have to make a compromise, if each party makes one step towards
the other, we can find common ground, and I am still hopeful that in the
very near future, in the coming days or weeks, we will reach that
common ground.”
On Wednesday, speaking via phone, Kem Sokha said he wanted an
election in February 2016. But he added that both parties needed to be
“flexible”.
On that same day, Rainsy announced that he and Hun Sen had reached an
agreement regarding a complete overhaul of the National Election
Committee and the process by which its members are appointed.
The CNRP and election watchdogs have long argued that NEC reform is needed for a future vote to be “free and fair”.
Both parties have remained tight-lipped as to any other aspects of
what they have agreed on, aside from a possible television licence for
the CNRP.
Rainsy said yesterday that concessions such as the leadership of the
National Assembly were “mentioned in the draft agreement”, and did not
deny that he personally could replace Heng Samrin as assembly president.
“I cannot confirm that, but I can tell you that this is not the
point, this is not the stumbling block. The stumbling block now is the
date of the election.”
Veteran political pundit Lao Mong Hay yesterday said that Hun Sen was
trying to play “the divide and rule strategy” in implying that Sokha
was holding back an agreement.
“If I were Sam Rainsy, I would tell Prime Minister Hun Sen: ‘Don’t
poke your nose into our internal affairs. Mind your own business.'”
He added that he did not think there was much validity to claims of
internal discord, and, on the contrary to Hun Sen’s claims that Sokha
was a hard-liner, “in the past, Kem Sokha used to be more subservient to
the CPP”.
“These days, perhaps, the CPP is [even] more divided than the CNRP,” he said.
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